My dude, you are helping me so much.... If you ever need some more ideas for what not to do, feel free to get ahold of me because if it is possible to do wrong, I have done it....
Thank you for the interesting tips Dusty. One of these great days I'll fire up my Tig and learn (only had my welder for 4 years and unboxed it!). Thank you for the informative videos you produce. Keep them coming.
Welding intercooler pipes I tune my gas flow untill it gets the perfect rainbow color never had an issue. Also this takes practice obviously don’t get discouraged. Even me being a pro tig welder am still trying to better my welding, sharpen my technique,
First off, thanks for the great videos. I'm 77 years old and started TIG welding about 5 years ago with an Everlast MTS221STi. Guys like you were instrumental in the learning process. The question that I have is, you rarely talk about tungsten size. I, pretty much, use 3/32"/2.4mm. On one of your recent charts, I notice you recommend 1/16" all the way up through 4mm. What is your preference?
I usually error in the direction of lack of fusion in my quest to outrun the heat that is chasing me in stainless. There's a tight happy medium in there.
I manage a small Mom & Pop sheet metal shop. We have doing more kitchen Stainless. Mostly 22 ga. and 20 ga.. I have a hard time maintaining an arc when I have it turned down to try and prevent warping. Any helpful hints?
If you are not already, try using a smaller tungsten. The bigger tungstens have a hard time with low amperage arcs. Also try a different grade of tungsten, certain ones are better at lower amperages.
seriously! I have not learned more about welding from anybody else and I have been around welding since I can remember‼️ 🪙 I seriously appreciate all of the content you put out!!🙏
Wusup ! Good job keep it going 🦾🦾 Would like to see u thin sheet stainless steel 0.8-1.5mm sheetmetal how to avoid warping and back purging and what do u think about purging gas as FORMIER ? :) Thank u in advance ;)
@@aseekingsoul7298 parameters could be different for every machine, but a good baseline for steel is 1 amp for every thousandth of material and the dial in from there. So say it’s 1/8 ( .125 ), then 125 amps would be your starting point. If it’s a foot pedal, you can add 20 or so and that way you could have a hotter start and dial back. He explains this in other videos but there’s a lot to go over. Best thing to do is get out there and get practice as you could have it setup perfectly and make a sh*tty weld if you don’t know what you’re doing…